CALVADOS (SPIRIT)

A bottle of calvados Pays D'Auge

'Calvados' is an apple brandy from the French ''région'' of Basse-Normandie or Lower Normandy.
It is a French brandy similar to cognac and armagnac.


Contents
History
Process of fabrication
Double and single distillation
Producing regions and legal definitions
Grades of quality
Tasting
Producers
Calvados in popular culture
Literature
External links
See also

History


Apple orchards and brewers are mentioned as far back as the 8th century by Charlemagne. The first known Norman distillation was carried out by ‘Lord’ de Gouberville in 1554, and the guild for cider distillation was created about 50 years later in 1606. In the 17th century the traditional ciderfarms expanded but taxation and prohibition of cider brandies were enforced elsewhere than Brittany, Maine and Normandy. The area called ‘Calvados’ was created after the French Revolution, but ‘Eau de vie de cidre’ was already called ‘calvados’ in common usage. In the 19th century output increased with industrial distillation and the working class fashion for ‘Café-calva’. When a phylloxera outbreak devastated the vineyards of France and Europe, calvados experienced a ‘golden age’. During World War I cider brandy was made for armaments. The ''appellation contrôlée'' regulations officially gave calvados a protected name in 1942. After the war many cider-houses and distilleries were reconstructed, mainly in the Pays d'Auge. Many of the traditional farmhouse structures were replaced by modern agriculture with high output. The calvados appellation system was revised in 1984 and 1996. Pommeau got its recognition in 1991; in 1997 an appellation for Domfront with 30% pears was created.

Process of fabrication


Calvados is distilled from specially grown and selected apples, of which there are over 200 named varieties. It is not uncommon for a Calvados producer to use over 100 specific varieties of apple to produce their Calvados. The apples used are either sweet (such as the Rouge Duret variety), tart (such as the Rambault variety), or bitter (such as the Mettais, Saint Martin, Frequin, and Binet Rouge varieties), with the latter category of apple being inedible. The reason the bitter apples are used is that if all sweet apples were used the resulting liquor would be too sweet, like apple jack. A typical Calvados recipe might include 30% sweet apples, 40% tart apples, and 30% bitter apples; another recipe might include 40% sweet, 20% tart, and 40% bitter.
The fruit is picked (usually by hand) and pressed into a juice that is fermented into a dry cider. It is then distilled into eau de vie. After two years aging in oak casks, it can be sold as Calvados. The longer it is aged, the smoother the drink becomes. Usually the maturation goes on for several years. A half-bottle of twenty-year-old Calvados can easily command the same price as a full bottle of ten-year-old Calvados.

Double and single distillation


A calvados pot still

The appellation of AOC calvados authorizes double distillation for all calvados but it is required for the AOC calvados Pays d’Auge.

★ Double distillation is carried out in traditional alembic pot-still -- called either ‘l'alambic à repasse’ or ‘charentais’. This process gives the spirit complexity and renders it suitable for longer aging.

★ Single continuous distillation in a column still. It gives the calvados a fresh and clean apple flavour but with less complexity.

Producing regions and legal definitions


Like most French wines, Calvados is governed by ''appellation contrôlée'' regulations. There are three appelations for calvados:

★ The 'AOC calvados' area includes all of the Calvados, Manche, and Orne ''départements'' and parts of Eure, Mayenne, Sarthe, and Eure-et-Loir.


★ AOC calvados makes up for over 70 percent of the total production.


★ Minimum of two years ageing in oak barrels.


★ The terroir, geographical area, is defined.


★ The apples and pears are defined cider varieties.


★ The procedures in production like pressing, fermentation, distillation and ageing is regulated.


★ Usually single column distillation.

★ The more restrictive 'AOC calvados Pays d'Auge' area is limited to the east end of the ''département'' of Calvados and a few adjoining districts.


★ Extensive quality control - the basic rules for AOC calvados together with several additional requirements.


★ Ageing for minimum of two years in oak barrels.


★ Double distillation in an alembic pot-still.


★ Produced within the designated area in Pays d'Auge.


★ A minimum of six weeks fermentation of the cider.


★ Flavour elements are controlled.

★ 'AOC calvados Domfrontais' reflects the long tradition of pear orchards in the area, resulting in a unique fruity calvados. The regulation is similar to the AOC calvados and the column still is used.


★ A minimum of 30 percent pears from the designated areas is used.


★ A three-year minimum of ageing in oak barrels.


★ The orchards must consist of at least 15 percent of pear trees (25 percent from the sixteenth harvest).

★ 'Fermier ‘farm-made’ calvados' - some quality minded producers both inside and outside the Pays d’Auge make ‘calvados fermier’, which indicates that the calvados is entirely made on the farm in a traditional agricultural way according to high quality demands.
Visiting a small calvados producer around Cambremer along the cider route

Grades of quality


The age on the bottle refers to the youngest constituent of the blend. A blend is often comprised of old and young calvados. Producers can also use the terms below to refer to the age.

★ ‘Fine’, ‘Trois étoiles


★ ', ‘Trois pommes’ - at least 2 years old.

★ ‘Vieux’ - ‘Réserve’ - at least 3 years old.

★ ‘V.O.’ ‘VO’, ‘Vieille Réserve’, ‘V.S.O.P.’ ‘VSOP’ - at least 4 years old.

★ ‘Extra’, ‘X.O.’ ‘XO’, ‘Napoléon’, ‘Hors d’Age’ ‘Age Inconnu’ - at least 6 years old. Often sold much older.
High quality calvados usually has parts which are much older than that mentioned. Calvados can be made from a single (generally, exceptionally good) year. When this happens, the label often carries that year.

Tasting


Calvados is the basis of the tradition of ''le trou Normand'', or "the Norman hole". This is a small drink of Calvados taken between courses in a very long meal, sometimes with apple sorbet, supposed to re-awaken the appetite. Calvados can be served as aperitif, blended in drinks, between meals, as digestive or with coffee. Well-made calvados should naturally be reminiscent of apples and pears, balanced with flavours of ageing. The less aged calvados distinguishes itself with its fresh apple and pear aromas. The longer the calvados is aged, the more the taste resembles that of any other aged brandy. As calvados ages, it may become golden or darker brown with orange elements and red mahogany. The nose and palate are delicate with concentration of aged apples and dried apricots balanced with butterscotch, nut and chocolate aromas.

Producers



Calvados Busnel

Père Magloire

Christian Drouin Coeur de Lion

Comte Louis de Lauriston

Lecompte

Manoir d'Apreval

Calvados Pierre Huet

Charles de Granville

Calvados Roger Groult

Chateau du Breuil

Coquerel

Boulard

Dupont

Ferme du Ponctey

Calvados in popular culture


In the 1963 novel ''On Her Majesty's Secret Service'' by Ian Fleming, James Bond drinks a glass of ten-year-old Calvados.
Calvados is the main characters' favourite drink in Erich Maria Remarque's novel Arch of Triumph.
Calvados is often referred to in the writings of mystic George Gurdjieff.
Cornelius Bear is known to have a stash of several well-aged bottles of calvados in the webcomic Achewood.
Inspector Maigret often stops in to a cafe for a glass of Calvados in Georges Simenon's novels and short stories.
On the album ''Us Against the Crown'' by ''State Radio'', there is a song called "Calvados Chopper." It speaks of a man who is driving a motorcycle while "hopped up on Calvados."
In ''Astérix et les Normands'' (Asterix and the Normans/Vikings), volume 9 of the popular Astérix comic books, Calvados is the national drink of the Vikings, and they are depicted drinking it out of the hollowed skulls of their dead enemies.
In the BBC television series Secret Army, the proprietor of the Cafe Candide and agent of the Resistance, Albert Foiret, (Bernard Hepton) keeps a supply of Calvados specially for his high ranking German customers. Including Sturmbannführer Ludwig Kessler (Clifford Rose) who, in the series, is head of the SS in Brussels.

Literature



Calvados - the world's premier apple brandy - tasting facts and travel by Henrik Mattsson. A first comprehensive report on calvados apple brandy in the English language.

External links



Normandy tourism site

The cider route (and calvados) in Pays d'Auge

Guide to calvados history, production, visiting, producers, literature and much more

Apples, Cider and Calvados in Pays d'Auge, Normandy

See also



Cider

Applejack (beverage)

Somerset cider brandy

Pommeau

Domfront

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